Oregon Federal Judge Says ICE’s Warrantless Arrests Are Illegal

from the self-made-masked-men dept

ICE has been telling itself all it needs to do is write its own paperwork and it can do whatever it wants. Memos — passed around secretively and publicly acknowledged by no one but whistleblowers — told ICE agents they don’t need judicial warrants to arrest people or enter people’s homes.

All they need — according to acting director Todd Lyons, who issued the memos — is paperwork they could create and authorize without any need to seek the approval of anyone else. ICE calls them warrants but they’re just self-issued paperwork in which the officer says a person needs to be arrested and then signs it. That’s it. The review process begins and ends at the same desk. If the agent swears it to be true, he’s only swearing it to himself, which means every finger can be crossed and every “fact” can be fiction.

Courts aren’t having it. ICE’s internal memos may claim there’s no need for the Constitution to come between them and their mass deportation efforts, but that doesn’t mean the Constitution agrees to be sidelined. The courts are stepping in with increasing frequency to protect constitutional rights. A lot of activity in recent months has focused on the due process rights being denied to detainees.

More recent activity is focusing on the Fourth Amendment which, if violated, naturally lends itself to other rights violations. Via Kyle Cheney of Politico (who has been tracking these cases since Trump’s most recent election) comes another case where a federal judge refuses to play along with ICE’s unconstitutional game of charades.

The opening paragraph of this opinion [PDF] lays out the facts. And they are ugly.

ICE officers are casting dragnets over Oregon towns they believe to be home to agricultural workers, calling them “target rich.” Landing in those communities, officers surveil apartment complexes in the early morning hours, scan license plates for details about the vehicles’ owners, and wait for them to get into their vehicles. Officers then stop, arrest, detain and transport people out of the District of Oregon to the Northwest ICE Processing Center (“NWIPC”), 144 miles away in Tacoma, Washington, before ultimately deporting them. Sworn testimony and substantial evidence before this Court show that ICE officers ask few questions and allow little time before shattering windows, handcuffing people, and detaining them at an ICE facility in another state.

There’s no “worst of the worst” going on here. These are the actions of masked opportunists who know the only way to make the boss happy is to value quantity over quality. Untargeted dragnets cannot possibly rely on probable cause, even considering Justice Kavanaugh’s blessing of racial profiling. Given this — and the administration’s desire to see 3,000 arrests per day — immigration officers can’t even be bothered to issue administrative warrants, much less secure judicial warrants, before performing arrests.

The Oregon courts drives home the point in the next paragraph (emphasis in the original):

The law on this issue is clear and undisputed. An ICE officer may arrest someone if the officer obtains in advance a warrant for their arrest. If the officer does not have a warrant, they cannot arrest someone unless they have probable cause to believe that both (1) the individual is in the United States unlawfully and (2) they are “likely to escape before a warrant can be obtained.”

The government’s response to this could be generously called “implausible.” It’s more accurately “risible” and backed by absolutely nothing that can’t be immediately contradicted by literally everything everywhere, as the court points out.

Plaintiffs challenge ICE’s practice of abusing its arrest power by failing to meet those
criteria before arresting, detaining, and deporting people. Defendants do not—and could not— argue that this practice is lawful. Rather, they argue that there is no such practice, and that the
myriad cases presented to this Court are mere coincidence.

But there is “such practice.” It’s impossible to deny it, even though the government tried to. The court isn’t interested in the government’s deflections and straight-up lies. It’s here to compare the facts to the law. Here are the facts:

[T]he overwhelming evidence in this record confirms that ICE officers targeted Woodburn and other cities in Oregon because of the large number of agricultural workers living in those areas. Officer testimony regarding human smuggling serves only as an inappropriate pretextual reason for developing reasonable suspicion for a stop. That officer also testified that he believed the van was suspicious because it had tinted windows and did not have any commercial markings.

When asked what gave the officers “reasonable suspicion that there may have been a crime afoot or that the folks in the van may not have had legal status,” the officer noted that the registered owner of the van had an immigration history, and that “[p]eople are being — going into a van early in the morning.” The officers did not have the identities of anyone in the van and they were not pursuing any known targets.The officers did not have a warrant for M-J-M-A-’s arrest.

Here’s more:

The evidence also demonstrates ICE’s practice of fabricating warrants after arrests were made. Tr. 306 (if an officer “encountered a file that did not have a warrant for arrest, an I-200,” he would create one); Tr. 356 (officer affirming that “for any case” involving a warrantless arrest, he would “create a warrant for the arrest after” individuals were detained at ICE field offices). This practice of creating warrants after the fact is highly probative of ICE’s failure to make individualized determinations of one’s escape risk prior to arresting them. That is especially true where, as in M-J-M-A-’s case, the encounter narratives for arrestees were exactly “the same.” Tr. 401.

Heading towards the granting of requested restraining order, the court makes it explicitly clear that federal immigration officers are routinely violating constitutional rights:

The Court finds that ample evidence in this case demonstrates a high likelihood—if not a certainty—that Defendants are engaging in a pattern and practice of unlawful conduct in Oregon…

And if it’s unlawful in Oregon, it’s illegal everywhere in the United States. Nothing in this order relies on Oregon’s state Constitution. Everything here falls under the minimum standard set by the US Constitution and its amendments.

The order ends with a stark warning — one that makes it clear what’s happening now is not only extremely abnormal, but a threat to the Republic itself.

It is clear that there are countless more people who have been rounded up, and who either remain in detention or have “voluntarily” deported than those, like M-J-M-A-, who were fortunate enough to find counsel at the eleventh hour. Defendants benefit from this blitz approach to immigration enforcement that takes advantage of navigating outside of the boundaries of conducting lawful arrests. For the one detainee who has the audacity to challenge the legality of her detention and gains release, several more remain detained or succumb to the threat of lengthy detention, and then instead “voluntarily” deport. Defendants win the numbers game at the cost of debasing the rule of law.

Finally, this Court has previously described ICE officers’ field enforcement conduct as brutal and violent. The practices are intended to strike fear across large numbers of people throughout Oregon. The persistent intensity of regular ICE immigration enforcement operations may very well have the intended effect of normalizing this level of violence. If this normalization continues, then even greater harm will be inflicted.

This is all much larger than the individuals who have somehow managed to challenge this administration’s deportation activities. This is only where it begins. If the courts can’t get this shut down, this rot will be deliberately spread to cover anyone who isn’t sufficiently deferential to the authoritarians ensconced in the GOP.

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Comments on “Oregon Federal Judge Says ICE’s Warrantless Arrests Are Illegal”

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23 Comments
Tycho says:

Re:

Warrantless Arrests are a routine occurrence by all law enforcement agencies across America.
Most cop agencies don’t even bother with the paper charade of non-judicial warrants.

The courts have geneally accepted this practice for century.

EXTREMELY naive to think ICE is pioneering some new 4th Amendment abuse.

DDmg says:

Re: Re: Re:

… that’s theoretically the legal standard, but ignored most of the time.

TAKE the simple example of shoplifting:

a department store security employee detains a thief that he saw steal some merchandise — the cops are called to arrest/book that person.

the arresting cop has no personal knowledge of a crime, but relies entirely on “hearsay” evidence of a 3rd Party to make the arrest.

Same basic warrantless arrest scenario with no first-hand police knowledge happens thousands of times a day.

Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re:

I get that it’s frustrating to see the regime keep fucking around without firmly finding out. Seeing one of those fuckers tossed in jail would make me happy as hell. That said: Can’t we at least be a little happy that federal judges are actively saying on the record how fucked up the regime’s actions are? I mean, judges used to rubber-stamp government actions like this all the time because they assumed the government was operating in good faith. They’re now actively questioning, in multiple instances, those actions and the credibility of those carrying out and approving those actions. That has to count for something, no matter how small.

I know cynicism is both rampant and well-deserved right now. Alls I’m saying is that a little optimism couldn’t hurt.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

That said: Can’t we at least be a little happy that federal judges are actively saying on the record how fucked up the regime’s actions are?

Sure. That’s the recurring little bit of happiness we’ve been getting for the last year. But it doesn’t seem like quite the same thing as optimism. To be optimistic, we have to think they’ll lead to a good result, and I’m not sure we even know what such a result would look like.

You say “tossed in jail”, but how do we get that to happen? It’d be great if a judge personally put the cuffs on someone, but I doubt that’s how it works.

Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

Like I said above, I doubt we’ll see people going to jail for this specific brand of bullshit while Trump still holds office. Contempt charges with fines and a short stint in jail for any refusal to pay those fines would be good, though. Threats of consequences are meaningless if those consequences aren’t handed down, so yes, the courts should start making the government find out what happens when it fucks around too much. That said, the courts even making those threats in cases where they likely would have given the benefit of the doubt to a more competent government regime is still worth acknowledging.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:2

Contempt charges with fines and a short stint in jail for any refusal to pay those fines would be good, though.

Right, but doesn’t that generally rely on the executive branch to, you know, execute the laws? Assuming they aren’t willing and the criminals haven’t been pardoned, does a judge have the authority to hire a bounty hunter or something? (I’m not aware of any precedent, but I imagine more than one judge has starting looking into stuff like this.)

Uncollected fines can result in garnishment orders to a person’s employer, but if the person’s employer is the lawless executive branch, then what? Even tax refund interception relies on the IRS, and guess what branch they’re in.

Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:3

Look, I don’t know how the courts would enforce such penalties if they’re handed down, but all the same, the courts even considering handing down those penalties is still a change worth celebrating, even if only in the limited context of “the courts now consider the government to be unworthy of implicit trust”. I’m trying to find the good in this fucked-up hellscape we live in right now. Small wins are still wins, any progress is better than none at all, and I’ll very much take threats of punishment over the courts trusting the government without question.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:4

Look, I don’t know how the courts would enforce such penalties

I was kind of hoping you did, so that I could join you in your optimism. (Not that I have no optimism about this.)

the courts even considering handing down those penalties is still a change worth celebrating

Yes, agreed, although the change isn’t as recent as you seem to suggest. Judges have been excoriating the administration since shortly after Trump took office again.

That One Guy (profile) says:

Re: Re:

It it an improvement? Sure.

Is it much of one? Not really.

It is clear that there are countless more people who have been rounded up, and who either remain in detention or have “voluntarily” deported than those, like M-J-M-A-, who were fortunate enough to find counsel at the eleventh hour. Defendants benefit from this blitz approach to immigration enforcement that takes advantage of navigating outside of the boundaries of conducting lawful arrests. For the one detainee who has the audacity to challenge the legality of her detention and gains release, several more remain detained or succumb to the threat of lengthy detention, and then instead “voluntarily” deport. Defendants win the numbers game at the cost of debasing the rule of law.

Finally, this Court has previously described ICE officers’ field enforcement conduct as brutal and violent. The practices are intended to strike fear across large numbers of people throughout Oregon. The persistent intensity of regular ICE immigration enforcement operations may very well have the intended effect of normalizing this level of violence. If this normalization continues, then even greater harm will be inflicted.

Behavior like that should not have taken over a year before courts reached the point of considering issuing any response stronger than a sternly worded ruling telling the government not to brutalize and/or violate the rights of yet another batch of people. While judges across the US have hemmed and hawed for over a year as they pretended that everything was just business as usual countless rights have been violated and lives ruined if not ended, so while I’ll admit that this is a slight improvement and hopefully a sign of more to come it’s well past the point it should have happened and I’m struggling to find any inclination to applaud a judge for doing the absolute bare minimum from their position of privilege.

Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

I’m not disagreeing with your points, because they’re legit. We don’t need to throw pizza parties over any of this. (Besides, I’m saving that particular celebration for whenever It Happens.) All the same, we can be happy that we’re finally seeing some kind of progress, however small. Defeatism is easy because you don’t need to do anything. Hope is what takes real courage because it requires you to look in the face of The Horrors and smile anyway.

Yes, we should have seen this sooner. Yes, judges should be enforcing their threats of punishment. Yes, the Trump regime should have found out after a full year of fucking around like this. None of that is controversial or disagreeable. Alls I’m asking people to do is take the wins for what they are while still hoping for more/better wins instead of seeing this win as a reason to be more pessimistic. Like, yeah, of course we should’ve gotten here sooner, but is it a bad thing to be glad we’re here now?

That One Guy (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2

Oh don’t get me wrong I’m happier with this result than the alternative, both what has been done and what they could have done, and I do hope that more judges start openly admitting that the regime is in open opposition to the law and the courts and need to be treated as such, I’m just finding it difficult to see or treat this as an achievement worth more than a ‘congrats on doing the bare minimum’ rather than what it should have been, expected, and long before this point.

ECA (profile) says:

2 points.

Wow, so WE can do what?
Create our OWN warrants, Instantly. And walk into THEIR HOMES, while they are at work?
Then Move everything around looking for ALIENs? Squirrels? Hamsters? Nintendo?
Arrest it and Run it around a few states, so you cant Find where I left it, Out in a very large Field or Hock shop?

Does thins include ALL republicans?
opps, Wrong address, this was Supposed to be the North dise of Town, not South.

Anonymous Coward says:

“Finally, this Court has previously described ICE officers’ field enforcement conduct as brutal and violent. The practices are intended to strike fear across large numbers of people throughout Oregon.”

Use of brutal violence to strike fear across large numbers of people? There’s a word for that, I think…

Oh, yes, terrorism. ICE and ISIS are both terrorists. The only difference is that one of the two says their prayers five times a day.

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